Empathy for the Worst of Us

Robert C. Koehler

By Robert C. Koehler

. . . Why do I feel the urge

to stroke the crime

as though it were my child,

to cup my hands

around the horror

and prevent it from going out?

These words are a fragment of a poem I wrote a nearly a quarter of a century ago, after reading about the arrest of Marilyn Lemak, who had murdered her three children — ages 7, 6 and 3 — by overdosing them with prescription medication, then strangling them in their beds. The motive: Her husband was breaking up with her; he’d begun dating. After the killings, she also tried to commit suicide by overdosing and slashing her wrists, but the try failed. She called the police on herself. This was in 1999.

Why do I feel the urge to stroke the crime as though it were my child? The story generated an impossible scream of disbelief, horror and . . . uh oh, you may have trouble groping with the next word I’m about to say . . . empathy.

By this I do not mean something soft and superficially caring; nor do I mean any feeling of connectedness with her, any sense of understanding, any urge to blurt: Come on, anyone might have done that. By “empathy” I mean an emotion bigger than anything I can possibly understand — an emotion both including and transcending anger and judgment, and also connecting Marilyn Lemak to the rest of humanity. How much news can I read about the wars being waged, the civilians bombed, the children lost in piles of rubble, before I go bonkers? The official actions of far too many governments include the murder of children, but, you know, abstractly. Their corpses are simply collateral damage.

Why do I feel the urge

to stroke the crime

as though it were my child,

to cup my hands

around the horror

and prevent it from going out?

Surely this small light

illuminates something:

not the perfunctory

why and how of what you did —

we know these answers

and know nothing —

but the submerged, slowly circling

and nameless what.

What permitted it?

What licensed your hand

to find the three spring buds

aspirating in their beds,

what undid your motherhood

and loosed the death angel

on your children

to pinch their noses shut

and stop the future,

what,

what?

She’s still in prison, all these years later, perhaps asking herself that very question every day. So are others. What undid our humanity and unleashed so much hell on the human race? Why did — why do — we kill our children? She was on a daily dose of Zoloft at the time of the murders. Is there a collective equivalent, a shadow that stalks us? How do we escape the void that swallowed Marilyn Lemak?

Find a way to bring her

back to us, I say.

Let her walk wounded

among the living

and point at the shadow,

she who fed it

with her blood.

Let her scream out its presence

until all of us see

how close it is

and how it thrives

in the dark, hot void

of our averted eyes.

And thus I ask, so many years later, do we have wisdom equal to our flaws? Are we too terrified of forgiveness, too terrified of love, to extend it to our enemies? Or are we satisfied committing murder — and suicide — with a self-righteous smirk?

Robert Koehler (koehlercw@gmail.com), syndicated by PeaceVoice, is a Chicago award-winning journalist and editor. He is the author of Courage Grows Strong at the Wound

About Carma Henry 24866 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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